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Zimbabwe
police force needs serious reformation
Kimion
Tagwirei
December 02, 2013
http://www.thestandard.co.zw/2013/12/01/zimbabwe-police-force-needs-serious-reformation/
The once respected, responsible
and credible Zimbabwe Republic Police has unexpectedly become one
of the most disturbingly and unbearably dirty force, unfortunately
at a time we seriously need a responsible, professional police force.
The general mandate of
the police enforcing the law, securing peace and order has been
gradually fading as the law enforcers dramatically turned to opportunists
and corrupt money-mongers.
It has become public
knowledge that the Zimbabwean police are turning roadblocks into
money-spinning ventures, worsening most people mistrust of them.
When bribery and nepotism
rise like how it has in the police force, it doesn’t affect
involved parties alone, but the whole nation suffers the consequences.
Some people begin to take the law into their own hands the same
way police have done, and anarchy slowly grows.
Who disagrees that most
of our police officers are now absolutely corrupt? Not only on the
roads where their corruption now seems normal to many; but in almost
all areas. Where one or two officers deal with a case, they can
safely change goal posts, demand bribes and release criminals.
We have resultantly come
to a point where the rich live above the law, while the poor succumb
to any corrupt machinations in Zimbabwe. Cases abound of criminals
who should have been paying hard for their crimes, who are however,
boasting of their freedom. They are seen with the same team of irresponsible
police officers who should be enforcing the law.
Some connected criminals
can play any game with the law in Zimbabwe just because of their
political affiliation. If politics can protect a criminal from prosecution,
criminality worsens and corruption deepens.
It’s disturbing
that police chiefs have lost bearing due to politics. Seemingly
safe under political cover, the spirit of corruption overflowed
from the top to bottom ranks. This overflow touched almost all hungry
officers who embraced it. Corruption spreads like a veld fire in
the police force. In fact, it has moved like light so fast that
very few, if any, police officers are still clean in Zimbabwe.
Most Zimbabweans now
take bribery as the best (though evil) way to prevent hell on earth,
in Zimbabwe so they bow to that, or form and cherish friendships
of convenience with police chiefs, at all costs; as long as the
relationships create a conducive environment for survival, in business
or any deal.
Many people just fear
the famous police cliché “I can arrest you!”
which flashes mental images of unpredictable hellish encounters
in our dirty cells and jails, so they find no better option than
paying bribes.
The police usually demand
bribes, indirectly or directly, depending with the situation. Zimbabweans
tend to normalise the abnormal whenever abnormality worsens. There
is no responsible authority making loud noise against corruption
- so it becomes the order of the day. The anti-corruption commission
seems to be a toothless bulldog. This leaves the innocent and helpless
ordinary men questioning who shall police the police?
Cases of police officers
sued or fired for corruption are reported, but those are very few,
of very unfortunate officers who failed to play the institutional
game well, with their bosses.
The shameful police corruption
is creeping like cancer throughout the whole nation. Two years ago
the Southern African Anti-corruption Trust ranked our national traffic
police as the most corrupt institution in the region. ZRP as a whole
is undeniably one of the most corrupt institutions regionally. This
is shameful to say the least. Surprisingly, we often hear the police
commissioner general, Augustine Chihuri saying ZRP is a dedicated,
professional and disciplined force, proficiently discharging their
constitutional mandate.
When such words are spoken
by a commissioner, during a time when a serious reformation process
is needed, people wonder who would save them. Can hiding behind
fingers make up the messed up image of the police force? Zimbabweans
know the truth.
If corruption is to be
dealt with in Zimbabwe, it must begin with the police. These politicised
officers are the major culprits. It becomes ridiculous that they
are the very people expected to root out corruption. Our government
must formulate and implement mechanisms that will deal with institutionalised.
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